Rewritten
Hi Sarah,
Saw your post about warehouse inefficiencies this week — that resonated, since it's exactly the problem we built our forecasting software to solve. We've helped logistics teams similar in size to yours cut stockouts by around 30% by predicting demand shifts before they hit the floor.
Worth a quick look? Happy to send a 2-minute overview, no meeting required.
Best,
[Your name]
About this tool
Cold email gets a bad reputation because most of it is generic and clearly mass-sent, and the fix isn't better formatting, it's specificity about the actual person you're emailing. This tool asks for notes about the prospect, not just the product, so the output can reference something real — their role, their company's situation, a recent trigger event — rather than opening with "I hope this finds you well." It ends with a low-friction ask by design, since cold email that asks for a 30-minute call upfront converts far worse than one that asks a simple yes/no question.
Frequently asked questions
What information do I need to provide about the prospect?+
Anything specific helps — their role, company, a recent post or news mention, or a pain point you know they have. The more specific the notes, the less generic the email will read.
Why does it avoid asking for a meeting directly?+
Cold emails that ask for a big commitment like a 30-minute call upfront tend to get ignored. The tool defaults to a low-friction ask, like a quick yes/no question or an offer to send more info, which tends to get more replies.
Can I use this for a warm lead instead of a totally cold one?+
It works fine for lukewarm leads too, but if you already have a relationship or prior conversation with the person, the sales follow-up generator tool is a better fit since it assumes prior context.